An artist, writer, publisher, educator, and art critic, Mira Schor’s multiple engagements have secured her a singular place in the contemporary art scene. She is known mainly for her painting, a medium that she explores and advocates for in particular, and for her contributions to the history of feminist art. All the works featured in Mira Schor’s exhibition “Moon Room” come from the Pinault Collection.
Her work expresses her political and theoretical concerns as much as it testifies to her passion for formalism, material, and language. For Schor, language is not a way to illustrate political battles, instead an example of what a female artist’s gaze can produce. Through the personal, intimate narratives that she instills in her works, Schor explores thought, memory, perception, and affects, with an abiding, deep interest “in the return of visual pleasure as a feminist intervention in painting”.
This first-ever exhibition in France features works on rice paper made by Schor in the second half of the 1970s along with a recent painting made in 2022. With their fragile, solitary presence, the masks and dresses are covered with highly personal, handwritten texts about her dreams and her interpretations of them, along with reflections on the Holocaust, to which she lost some of her family, and political writings. “In these works on paper, all that remains of the body are traces of its active, thoughtful character: writing,” which appears in transparency, as an overlay, or as an erasure, “which thus complicates women’s legibility”, wrote Mira Schor. With her incessant interrogation of painting, Schor presents a representation of her own body in the heart of this exhibition Time/spirit (New Red Moon Room), an oil on canvas from 2022. This recent work bookends with the one she made in 1972 at Womanhouse. Lit by a bright, red moon, the artist’s completely painted figure, standing, as if in motion, is now depicted lying in bed, drawn with a furtive stroke of just a few lines.
When one enters the very unique space of the Studio in the Bourse de Commerce, it is as if one penetrates a very intimate space, a “room of her own”, a creative space in which visitors experience the passage of time in the gaze of a feminist, politically engaged woman artist. In this layout, designed by Schor herself, this group of enigmatic figures expresses all the power and vitality of a group and of the individuals who constitute it. These works testify to the artist’s passion for language. In her canvasses, words appear at times as fully legible, and at others, more discretely and transparently, embedded in the different layers of materials of the dresses and masks.
More information on the event can be found here.